Users need to create an account, which takes about two minutes, before they can start using it. Once in, you can choose whether to build an app for Windows 10 or 8.1, the latter offering far less customisation.

I decided to go with a Hosted Web App and dragged The Next Web’s feed in. Alternatively you can drag content from RSS feeds, Flickr and even YouTube. Although the site looked fairly terrible in portrait (we switched to landscape), you can build in tiles to drag in feeds from elsewhere to make it more personalized.

It includes software that will automatically generate screenshots for listing on the Store, and an app-simulator across all devices.

It took less than 10 minutes to set the whole thing up and can be pushed on to the store without any hassle. The template is crudely simple, and probably won’t make you a millionaire. But the result is a Universal app that can run on all Windows devices and even Raspberry Pi 2 and IoT hardware.